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| Negotiating Word
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| = Structure, content, and layout =
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| # Three aspects, or dimensions, of a document
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| ## '''Structure'''
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| ##* The elements of a document and the rules that govern their organization
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| ##** e.g. Book, Chapter, Verse
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| ##* Two general kinds:
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| ##** Block-level, e.g. paragraphs, extracts
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| ##** In-line, e.g. book titles, proper nouns, emphases
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| ##* "Genres" differ by what elements there are and how they are organized
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| ##** Letters, Monographs, Memos, etc.
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| ## '''Content'''
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| ##* The actual text
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| ##* Linguistic
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| ## '''Layout'''
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| ##* Block-level stuff: line spacing, indents, etc.
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| ##* In-line stuff: font size, italics, etc.
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| # Things to consider
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| ## Structure, content and style are independent dimensions of a text
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| ## However, they are conflated in traditional practice\
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| ## By convention, we associate styles with elements -- e.g. italics and titles, initial uppercase with proper nounts, bold and large font for section titles
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| ## However, a word processor does not work in this way
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| ##* You have to explicitly identify elements
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| = First Things =
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| == Configuring the Toolbar ==
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| == Disabling Annoying "Features" ==
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| == Word's Views ==
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| # Normal
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| # Print
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| # Web
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| # Outline
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| # Reading
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| = Styles =
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| == The Style Panel ==
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| == Types of Style ==
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| == Aspects of each Style ==
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| == Viewing the styles ==
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| = Headers =
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| == Headers are Special ==
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| == The Document Map ==
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| == Master Documents ==
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| == The Outline View ==
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| == Tables of Contents ==
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| = Sections =
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